The Chinese Qu Dongyu, who is currently the vice minister of agriculture in China, received 108 out of 191 votes during the first electoral round for the position of the new head of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). He will follow up the Brazilian José Graziana da Silva in August.

TransitionThe FAO is going through a transition, explains Fresco, who worked at the FAO in Rome for nearly ten years. It used to be a centralist organisation with many agricultural experts in various countries, but at that time, the FAO was the only global food authority and still had a significant budget. There are now more global food organisations, and the FAO is required to collaborate with local experts and global knowledge institutions such as WUR, Fresco states. She suspects that Qu Dongyu will be open to this.

PhD candidateFresco has known Qu Dongyu for a long time, even before he obtained his PhD in Wageningen in 1996 on potato cultivation under professor Evert Jacobsen’s supervision. ‘He is very proud of Wageningen. He visited Wageningen last year to discuss his candidacy with me.’

AgricultureQu is the first Chinese in a high international position, and Fresco thinks it is no coincidence that it is in an agricultural position. ‘The Chinese governors think 30 years ahead. Agriculture is very important for China. The country is not self-sufficient, so China wants to maintain good relations in the global food sector and to maintain visibility in this aspect.’ Qu’s appointment indicates that he has good connections and that China has a strong diplomatic network in the agricultural world. For many years, Qu was a researcher at and director of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS), an organisation with many international contacts.

CollaborationFresco knows that Qu would like to collaborate with Wageningen. She hopes for a structural collaboration between the FAO and WUR on several global challenges. These could include emerging animal diseases, food safety, sustainable forest management and sustainable management of marine resources. ‘I would like to leave small projects behind and move towards a structural collaboration, in which, together with the FAO, we share our knowledge with vulnerable countries.’

Re:acties4

Achyut Man Singh, M.Sc, (1983-85) batch from WUR

15 juli 2019 5:19:27

It is really a good news that some one from our neighbor has got the key position on FAO, as being one of Alumni off WUR, we congratulate him and wishes his successful tenure in the future.problem facing the world is the climate change, due to deforestation and too much intervention in the ecosystem, depletion of fresh water, excessive use by the so called development. If at all we can restrict the further degradation of forests, may be we could sustain in future. Forest conserve water resources, produce oxygen, and instigate rainfall occurrence, so it is may be more important for sustainability in the growing population of human being.

Xiaoyong Zhang

30 juni 2019 19:38:54

China has lifted 800 million Chinese out of poverty since 1978. Many chooses to ignore this fact. It might be the time for FAO to learn the experiences in order to hit the goal of ending world hunger by 2030.